v If it's Good The Guardian is For it For the Island @ltr @Mfltlfilifl “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” yon. LXXVI. N0. 25 Authorized I! Ch. m by Round Ottawa. and for payment 1 .at “ Norman Black. president of the P.E.l. Agricultural Coun- cil (right) chats with, left to right. Dairy Superintendent H. .l MacDonald. S. A. Hilton, .l‘ . - .3 . .; in Y I“ . ' 5 AGRICULTURAL COUNCIL HOLDS MEETING 'gu’fifi' W" CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3], 1963. "M M0“ SEVEN CENTS THAN WEATHER Cloudy with snowfiurries clearing this afternoon; winds light increasing to north 20. Low-high, 15 and 25. is PAGE? the Birch Court auditorium. Agriculture Minister Andrew MacRae officially opened the conference. which concludes this evening with a banquet. ‘St‘t' Superintendent Experimental Farm. Fredericton, NB. who will be the guest speaker at this morning's session. and Council Secretary Dave Ward. Two-day sessions are held in story on page S.) . Parliament §At A Glance i By THE CANADIAN mass I I t t t . MAC DISCUSS‘ES FAILURE Deep Division In Beliefs Seen In Action By ECM LONDON (Reuters) H Prime Minister Macmillan. in a broad- cast Wednesday night on the failure of Britain‘s European (‘ommon Market negotiations. said “what has happened in the last few weeks has really re- vealed a deep division of beliefs between its and our friends." "i am sorry 0 say -. that France. to looking backwards. not forwards." he added. Macmillan said the Brussels negotiations broke down Tues- day “not because they were going to fail but. curiously enough. because they were go— ln: to succeed. \lacmillan continued: "What happened at Brussels i‘cstcrday was bad—bad for its“ bad for Europe and bad for the whole free world. “A great opportunity has been missed. Now it is no good trying to disguise or minimize that fact. at we and our friends were trying to do at Brussels was something very creative. and attractive and dramatic." CITES AIM The prime minister said Brit- ain had on "rylnl‘t strengthen the whole of Western Europe in a way which would 0 while Chatham was isprcad oiit all over the free backwards, Mac millan ob- worI .” serv After saying the present "They seem to think one French government was looking nation can dominate Europe or. I equally wrongly. that Europe Light Snow and without allies." I Avorld, including _ Common "5 wealth and. the Bit ed States.’ ltn an equal and honorable |partnership. and that is why we tin ' ' Iln Province . Britain are determined to HALIFAX mp. Chrtain so“ {stand by the Atlantic alliance." I . ' I I Macmillan said there was no iLIOI’lS of Newfoundland could getiready made alternative to six-eight inches of snow todayMarkef membership. from a disturbance expected tot “All through the negotiations blanket Nova Scotia with four-five have been ' the closest six inches during the hihhh the .touch _with the Commonwealth weather hm“. here 38- ,countries at every level Now only the southernmost so“ we shall take counsel With them tions of the Maritimes were ex- izga’" a: t“ w at I; PE“ pected to get any appreciable‘ 0"“ 9 Same w“ ‘9 (European Free Trade Associa- . ow f nm the distur- . . . ggTLntvmchnwag lbw“ farming. ‘ tionl countries—(the outer-circle ‘ ‘ «and also. of course with the 18‘; w°d;°5day. 1"“; d Prinwiiinitcti States. ew runswrc ' ' . ‘ - . i As to why the ln-month ne- Edward “land “0"” gm 1'“Ie‘gotiations with the Market na- more than snowflurries but tem-1ions on Brush“ entry into the pcraturcs were cool during theiCOmmon Mark“ had broken night. Campbellton. N.B.. w‘asidown‘ he said h was “not be. five above late Wednesday night i muse "WV were going to fail." .‘hrof” M‘but. curiously enough. because Summerslde. P.E.l. it “as 20th“, were going to succeed degrees and 23 at Charlottetown. i . . . ." can rule alone without friends‘ Macmillan said Britain must. co-opcrate with the rest of the. Queen, Prince Philip leave On Tour Ioday LONDON tRcuIersi -»- Queen tries in mid and was in Elizabeth and Prince Philip tralia last November. leave today for a tour of The 1963 royal tour begins to- New Zealand and Australia in day when the royal couple de- which the fuss and feathers part on a 10.600-mile flight to traditionally associated with Fiji in the South Pacific. ai'riv. royal tours will be slashed to ing there on the evening of Feb. 8 minimum 1 informal engagements the royal visitors see Ans- ~'l'he Queen and Philip last. Ma _ will let visited Fiji in 1953. ordinary citizens at wor and The Queen's BOAC Boeing- play. amid the heavy round of 707 jctliner will make short state welcomes. banquets arid rcfuclling calls at Vancouver .inaugurations’. Buckingham Palace spokes~ Imen said Wednesday there has, Ibeen a sharp reduction in the number of full-dress formal presentations. garden parties and official functions since the I Queen and her husband last vis- ‘lted New Zealand and Australia and Honolulu. At ‘iji the royal yacht Bri- tannia awaits the Queen and the prince. who will wake the morning of Feb. 2 in Suva Bay where a Fijian chief will invite them ashore for elaborate wel- coming ri es Then they sail for Waitangi. I WEDNESDAY. Jan. 30. 1963 in 1954. ‘1 cw Zealand. aboard the Bri— paui Mal-fin (I. -.. Essex Philip alone visited both coun- tannia. arriving there Feb. 6, East: renewed his charge . . . . - that the cabinet Is split on Ithe nuclear arms issue hilt I I drew no government reply. Prime Minister Diefenhakcr . said he likely will make his I the winter decline in jobs will be slower this year but that unemployment. remains a se- rious problem. Two Conservative senators denied a report that mem- bers of the Canadian NATO Blamed On SIU OTTAWA ((IPt —- A Toronto shipping lawyer charged Wed- nesday that the Seafarers' In- ternational Union of Canada set up a fictitious union in a bid gain bargaining rights. the two officials returned to the SIU. Mr. Geller suggested that MEBA in essence was afig- ment of the overactive imagin- in keep control of marine en- ation of SIU President Hal C. gincers employed by major Banks. Mr. Gauthier denied Great Lakes shipping firms. this. parliamentary delegation in _, _ .- Paris spent their nights in ['J- 0]» kccnglr: POEM-£61“: m m .lubs. ,pper .a'es ltppm . imt e , .g ( imade the accusation in ques- HURSDAY. Jan. 3| tioning Gilbert Gauthier. 43. '~ The Commons meets at SIU vice-president in charge of. 2:30 pm. EST to Continue marine engineers. before tlielDeny study of labor department federal labor inquiry of Mr. spending estimates. The Sen- Justice T, G, NorrL. I . OTTAwA (Cp) __. Two Com ate sits at 3 p.m. Geller said the Marineharvative senators denied wed. ——‘——‘ FInEilP("‘S Beneficial ASSOCI8-_nesday that members of the Probe Open In N.S. Death l lNVERNESS. N. S. (CP) - RCMP have opened a ‘ ‘vestigation" into the death of alohn Angus Kennedy, 72. found dead Wednesday .n a field off the. Main Street here. Kennedy had been missing from his home here since Mon- day and when fcund showed severe cuts about the face and hands. tion of Canada made an eight-' month appearance in 1961-62 on. the Great. Lakes. financed by .the SIU. headed by former SIU officials and created by the. SIU to win certification for marine C a n a d i a n delegation to the NATO parliamentarians' con. ference in Paris last November spent their nights in night clubs and slept by day. Senators John llnatyshyn of ‘engineers' . . V ‘Saskatoon and Walter Aseltine The Mann" .Eng‘"?°l‘5 Asm‘of Rosetown. Sask.. were com- ciation. he said. tried unsuc- menting on 3 Nov. 28 report. in Montreal La Presse stating that certain members of the delega- tion spent most of their time in the arish entertainment dis- trict of Place PigalLe. Senator Hnatyshyn. a mem- ber of the delegation. said “in spite of what has been said to the contrary I would like to cessfully to win certification for the engineers after the SiU's licensed division had lost them. because of fraud and misrepre- sentation. Mr. Gauthier denied that SIU officials were. "masquerading". as MEBA officials—although he. admitted that. two of his agents An inquest and an autopsy acted as officers nf MEB . . , have been ordered hilt no date during the certification cam. state that 't'he delegation did its set for the inquest as yet. paign. When MEBA failed to work wet. IDRUNK BLAMES :ECM DECISION LONDON Businessman Henry Phil- lips. 41. charged with drunken driving. told a magistrate Wednesday he was “an early victim of the fact that we have not joined the Common Market." Phillips said Britiin Mar- keI membership was impor- tant in his business. When the bad news came from Brussels. Belgium. "1 sup- pose it went to my head." c was fined £2 tsa' and barred from driving for a year. 4 Crashes lake loll. 0i lives NEW YORK (API‘VA new type. of submarine hunting navy plane crashed into the. Atlantic .about 230 miles southeast 0 ‘New York Wednesday while on a lengthy practice mission. bringing to four the number of t Reiiterst plane crashes since Tuesday m night. "Apparently none persons aboard . . . rived." said an from Patuxent River. M home base fordhe P-8A Orion a fOlIt‘TngIllP. Jet-prop aircraft. A U.S. Coast Guard cutter and} two navy destroyers were. at “599‘” t“ the scene. . A U.S. Air Force 8-52 jet bomber crashed Wednesday in the rugged Sangre de Cristo Mountains 45 miles northeast of NM. The bomber was based at Walker Air Force ‘ Santa Fe. Base near Roswell. N. A four-engine continental Alf-ithe U.S. should issue such lines Viscount crashed into. 3 istatement but. blamed it on the. dike While attempting a landinglconfiicting versions of defence at Kansas City's Municipal Air- 'port Tuesday night. killing all ,five passengers and three crew Imembers aboard the prop-jet craft. in New Orleans. a small passenger plane owned by a small schedule line. operating in southern Louisiana and car- [Continued on Page 2 Col. 2t of the 14 5 sur- atnnouncement t d" governments. . Washington Takes Issue With Diet On Warheads l t l t Meet Commitments, I I : State Dept. Urges By HAROLD MORRISON iindiplomalic interference" ii WASHINGTON icei - The. 'nnlfdian affairs- d , T ere was no immc late com- state department called on Can- mm from NC“, nmmcratm ada Wednesday to meet Its paw. load". T_ (3 Douglas. nuclear commitments. saying ‘ the Soviet bomber fleet will remain a threat throughout this. decade and that an effective continental defence against this “common threat" is necessary. Taking issue with Prime} Minister Diefenbaker's report‘ of Canadian-U.S. negotiations to, Diofonbakeq- said Wedqws- 0" “Udear Warheadsv the de"day night he would make no Dariment 53“! the Canadian comment on the United States government “has 30! 1‘5 yet‘statedepartment's statement pf‘fl’ose‘! any .arrangement. 51“" concerning nuclear weapons uno fictently practical to contribute; m aft-er he has Studied it an .effectively to North American his return to Ottawa. .derencan Mr. Diefcnbaker spoke. here I in a statement indicating a Wednesday night to the Insti— jdeep cleavage between the. two‘ tute of Professional ' administrations. the. d part-rand said that he had ". ment said the two Bomarc-Bj hours of work" to do when he anti-aircraft missile squadrons returns to the capital. that 1Canfada obtained are. not merey or rotecti n of th . p ° 9 Actress B-ardot .Granted Divorce iU.S. deterrent force as Diefen- PARIS tchterst -: A civil baker had contended but. also for the protection of Toronto .and Montreal. “The Bomarc-B was not de- court granted a divorce Wed- ‘nesday to Brigitte Bardot and actor Jacques Charrier. Each :alieged “serious insults. signed to carry any conven~ tional warheads." the depart- “The matter of available a nuclear warhead for it and for other. Miss Bardot, 28. and Charrier. nuclear - capable weapons sys-‘ZG. WOI‘P at "Etibe tems acquired by Canada has'Loilvecienne in June. 1959. A 'son. Nicolas. was born the fol- lowing year. A reconciliation attempt failed last Nov 8. been tthe subject of inconclusive it was Brigitte's second mar- PM Delays Comment OTTAWA tITI‘J- - Prime Minis- discussions between the two In addition to the Bomarc-B. a similar problem exists with _ _ dern super- riage. Her first was to film ,mic yet Interceptor with which ' director Roger Vadim in 1952 zthe RCAF has n provided..th she was 18. Vadim rock- Wihhout nuclear air defenceieted her to film stardom. but I warheads. they operate at far jless than their full potential . effectiveness." they were divorced In 1957 Liberal Leader Pearson serv'ces found it suiprismg the; Get Boost OTTAWA (CPI. A pay in- crease for the armed forces is r e e e i v ing consideration. Fi- nance Minister Nowlan said Wednesday. But he declined direct com- ment on Ottawa rumors that the 125.000 members of the navy. army and air force are to get an elght-per-cent boost ‘retroaetive to Jan. 1. ipolicy which he said have. come -from Mr. Diefenbaker and Mr. IHarkness. Social Credit Leader Thomp- son termed the U.S. statement -"a bombshell to say the least— it could be the. spark to topple the government.“ H o w e. v e. 3'. Mr. Thompson also attacked ‘the U.S. move as a “blatant PM Expresses Gratitude Liberals And NDPs Insist FuII Debate On Estimates By KEN KELLY ‘ OTTAWA (CPi Liberals and New Democrats. unmoved by the approaching end of the. government's spending powers. stood firm Wednesday in their Intention to give full debate to! Ille_t962-63 spending program. ‘ Liberal Leader Pearson Indi-I rated after a caucus meeting of I Liberal MP: Wednesday that] his party will take all the time considered necessary to exam-I Atlantic Development Board Scheduled Saturdaynzgtstm FREDERICTON (CPI N Brig. Michael Warden announced Wed- nesday the first meeting of the new Atlantic Development Board Wall‘l he held in Halifax Satur- d 3 Wendell. Fredericton Whit er named chairman of u" "I by Prime Minister Dt ‘ last week. said he WI 0211“ in Halifax today to M moment: .for the ' Prelth one. “We will be gm” gar-elm to‘one n. Inc the 36.000.000.000 program. iiniz program unapproved The New Democratic whip Stan~fprogram was submitted to Par- ley Knowles said the New Dcm- liament last. February as esti- ocrats. who also held a caucus mates of what would be spent meeting Wednesday. will takelup to March 31. 1963.. no steps to cut short their rc—t Since that time. the govern- Sponsibility '0 t‘Xnm inc the ment has financed operations spending of the people's money. by grants of temporary spend- ing authority from the Com- TIME RUNS SHORT mons but these powers expire Their statements appeared toIJan, 31_ Indicate the Rovrt'nmf‘ni Willi The government made a start run out of time with its spend- m. netting emu-out of the D» gram last November when it placed before the Commons the spending of six departments. However. the nevernment has provided only five days since study of these depart- m Three more. depart- ments are to be started on their members of the board would be '2'“; I" m" C‘m‘mo" M‘md'y resent but was now concerned " I’ltat Fred Ayre. the vafound- menu" Prf’lra “‘5 "my land representative. might be brought in on the four succeed- prevcnted mm, attending. Bow. 1 mg Mondays. three at a time. ' ' ' ' ‘ However. by about Feb. 15 the ed by me "flux!" Mr' M“ government will have to meet I“ a director t rm‘ bills—for payrolls. pen- Wh . allowances and the like. He said he had expected all I the remaining 12 depart- the federal government prepared to provide "massive in- ‘ “spoon!” to develop the reg-z ion a economy. peeled. probably next Wednec. day. Meanwhile. the Commons M" - . launched debate Wednesday on “paw. 1: the labor department spending elude recommending to the Hm" “I. eromdat measures it believes”l m t mm d.” would u the ralonmaemg. i The entering of three new de- partmem Iext a. .m 1m 0“ £013: in: I W:mtc baton «to membersoft burl! W." hando- II'I RH. Sobey of Stellartoo. ‘m NS. MJ. MeQuald of solris. of Pt‘Ju I! Dona! “store up I V "dictu- Imu-th‘llltl.‘ Hun a-W- as A}‘ to... '\W w .54 - ‘zm. . ma W1. ,.: .To Britain For Concern OTTAWA (CPI — The Com- monwealth nations should be igraicfiil for the concern Britain showed for them in the Com-I mon M a r k e t negotiations. lPrime Minister Dietenbakcr .said Wednesday. “Britain could have secured entry into the Common Market under the terms of the Treaty 'of Rome as it was." .reporters after a cabinet meet- 'ing. “But as a member of the Commonwealth. Britain took a stand that she would not sacri- fice Commonwealth interestse— and for this, the members 0 the Commonwealth should be profoundly grateful." Mr, niefenhaker recalled that 3‘ '9 i an in 1057 he said Commonwealth other countries. That. was re- free Itrade could and would be ex- flected in its support of a panded. world trade conference. to be "And I haven't changed my held this spring. mind since. convinced Lthat trade within the. Common. wealth can be very considerably Iaccelerated." ‘QUESTIONED ON TRADE in the Commons. H. W. Her- ridge INDP—Koott‘nay West) asked the prime minister whether the government is con- sttiering offering tariff adjust- .ments to ritain. Commo Earlier. Dr. niefenbaker de~ inied an Australian newspaper report quoting him saying he ‘and Prime Minister Macmillan had discussed formation of a Commonwealth trading commu- ‘nity during a telephone talk ‘Tucsday. He said in an interview there was “not one iota of truth" in the story in the Melbourne Sun wealth and other countries to News - Pictorial. which quoted stimulate trade. him telling reporters that Mr. r. Diefenbaker replied that. Macmillan was thinking of such the government has always a Commonwealth move in view sought to stimulate fruitful two- of British failurne to enter the «way trade between Canada and European (‘nmmnn Market 3 - tlABO‘R ESTIMATES PO'NDERED Job Outlook Improves OTTAWA (CP)~»-The drop ex- pected this winter in the ranks the three levels of government previously inside the Commons ' . share costs. totalled $3I9.000.0m and outsu e chasm TWth W for um sum d the hays] New and Australia lather at Loo- fly"!!! of job-holders should be below average. but unemployment re- 1» He said great strides have been made—through the Na- tional Productivity Council and so far and were provrriing 107.- 000 jobs. Oover the last two years. and mains fl St‘l‘ittus Problem. Labor elsewhere—in promoting trust especially since the beginning Minister Starr said Wednesday. between industrial management 196. substantial imPrOVP' This is true despite indica- and labor. mcni economically had been tions of c con om i c improw- Projects under the annual PVIf'It‘nI. ments. he told the Commons In winter works program. In whle The Gross National Product launching scrutiny of his de- —~total of goods service! partment's spending estimates producedirwas up abou't eight for the fiscal year ending per cent ast year Empoyment March 31. Ln the third quarter of I962 was None of the other depart- igher between four and five I mental estimates for the fiscal mm." per cent than two years ear- 3 year have been approved yet. "nib"! " 1“ '7 tier. Mr. Starr asked the opposi- hh‘a‘n“ markdh'” ' ‘7 Mr. Starr said the average _ ion for co-opcration in expedit~ Comm“ ' ‘ ‘ ' ls work week during the tint ""‘ - ting passage of the labor Eamon.“ " .‘ leven months of 1952 was also " icstimates. The two speakers Km” can” ' ' ' ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ' ' ' " ‘ tip—by a half-hour-from the ‘ Ew who followed. James Byrne (1. (.h gum“ " 5 icorresponding period in 1901. ST ——l(ootenay East! and Marcel "'3" c t ' ‘ ' ' ‘ ' ‘ ' ' 2 1 Significantly. latest unem' ‘ Lessard (SC—Lac St. Jenni. ‘ “c' an”, ‘ ‘ ' ‘ " , lployment figures showed don Airpofi. England. The and mini: for a brief M :said their parties would co-op- ""‘fl"‘°" ° "" "'fi'iih -fewer than -fifttt of Queen and Prince Philip all! must at Vancouver en route. crate. me”. ‘ ‘ ‘ ' ‘ ' ‘ ‘ . jobless had been Idle it the emit-week tour inlay. ICP quihoto from British ‘ The minister': revrew cnv-. ‘ " ' ‘ ’ ' ' “ monk or more This woe “- m bottom no Fill! Information Setvm.) Iored a lot of [round explored i—--------—--Iticularly mom. a i"